THORNBURY is a parish situated nearly 2 miles W. of the main road
from Bromyard to Tenbury, and extending to the borders of
Worcestershire; is distant 4 miles N.W. of Bromyard, 8½ E. of Leominster,
7 S.S.E. of Tenbury, and 18 N.N.E. of Hereford; is in Broxash hundred,
Bromyard union, county court district, polling district, and petty sessional
division. The population of Thornbury with Netherwood in 1861 was
224; in 1871, 241; inhabited houses, 49; families or separate occupiers,
49; area of parish, 2,130 acres; annual rateable value, £2,378. William
Lacon Childe, Esq., of Kinlet hall, near Bewdley, who is lord of the manor,
Martin Curtler, Esq., of Worcester, and Edward Morris, Esq., M.D., of Elm
grove, Thornbury, are the principal landowners. The soil is clayey and
loamy; subsoil, red marl; and gives rise by several heads and powerful
springs to the river Froome, sometimes called Froomy, which, passing by
Bromyard, empties into the Lugg at Mordiford. The chief products are
wheat, beans, hops, fruit, &c. On the summit of the Wall hills, in this
parish, are vestiges of a British encampment, which is supposed to have been
constructed by the great Caractacus. Its area is about 20 acres. Coins and
weapons have been discovered in this locality.
Thornbury is in the
diocese and archdeaconry of Hereford and rural deanery of North Froome;
living, a rectory; value, £185, with residence and 25 acres of glebe;
patron, W. L. Childe, Esq.; rector, Rev. John Williams, of St. Bees
College, who was instituted in 1843. The church of
St. Ann was restored
in 1865-66, at a cost of £939, of which £300 was borrowed on the rates,
and the remainder raised by subscription. It consists of nave, chancel,
south porch, and west tower. There are many interesting architectural
features in the church, and much care has been taken to preserve them.
On the north side there is a Norman arch and window, and on the south
side an arcade of Early English character. The chancel has been entirely
rebuilt, with the addition of a vestry, as well as the whole of the north
wall of the nave and part of the south wall. A new stone porch has been
added on the south side, the tower has been scraped and pointed, and a
new spire erected, covered with oak shingle.
A west window has been
inserted in the tower, which now opens into the church, and a handsome
stone arch has been erected at the entrance to the chancel. The tiled
floors, which are remarkably beautiful, were supplied by Mr. Godwin, of
Lugwardine, from a design by F. R. Kempson, Esq., F.I.B.A., of Hereford,
who superintended the restoration. The pulpit is of stone, and
springs from a small screen of the same material. The seats, desks, &c.,
are of old oak, varnished. The church is heated by one of Messrs.
Rimington's stoves. It was reopened for divine service on July 15th,
1866. The parish register dates from 1538, and is in excellent
preservation. A new stained glass window has been recently presented by Martin
Curtler, Esq.; subject, from Exodus xxxiii. The charities belonging to
the church amount to £4 yearly.
A school-room, with residence for the
mistress, was built in 1871 at a cost of £735, and opened in January
1872, for the accommodation of the children of Thornbury, and the
adjoining parishes of Edvin Ralph and Collington (part of). It is under
the management of a committee; average attendance of boys and girls, 40.
Church House is a large brick residence, the property of Martin Curtler, Esq.,
who occasionally resides there.
Thornbury Court, occupied by John Lycett,
Esq., is a modern residence built of rubbed and gauged stone, beautifully
situated in the midst of ornamental timber on rising ground with south
aspect, and commands magnificent views of Herefordshire, having the
Malvern hills in the eastern distance, and, with other lands and
Elm Grove,
his residence, is the property of Edward Morris, Esq., M.D.
About 1 mile
N.E. of Thornbury is
Netherwood, a farm containing about 600 acres. It
was part of the estate of the Mortimers, of whom Roger Mortimer, Earl of
March, was a native of this place. After the battle of Bosworth Field,
William Baskerville, of the house of Eardisley, who had accompanied the
army of the Earl of Richmond, afterwards King Henry VII., from Leominster,
and fought valiantly in his cause, received a grant of it from that
sovereign. In the following century it was sold by Thomas Baskerville,
Esq., and, having passed through several families, was purchased, about
the time of Charles I., by Edward Pytts, Esq., whose descendant, Jonathan
Pytts, Esq., of Kyre house, the late owner, willed it to William Lacon
Childe, Esq., of Kinlet hall, co. Salop, the present proprietor. The
mansion is recorded to have been a noble structure, and was surrounded by a
park of nearly one hundred acres. In the former was born the great but
unfortunate Robert Devereux, Earl of Essex, Queen Elizabeth's favourite
and victim. Queen Elizabeth visited here.
POSTAL REGULATIONS.- Letters are received through Worcester via
Bromyard, and arrive by messenger from the latter place about 10.30
a.m. There is no delivery on Sundays. Bromyard is the nearest money
order and telegraph office. Post town, Worcester.
Parish Church (St. Ann's).- Rev. John Williams, Rector; Messrs.
William Hanson and Thomas Grubb, Churchwardens; Thomas Knight,
Sexton.
District School (boys and girls).- Miss Clara A. Grove, Mistress.
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